| Literature DB >> 31797078 |
Andrew Martin1, Michael Paddock2,3, Christopher S Johns4, Jessica Smith5, Ashok Raghavan6, Daniel J A Connolly1,6, Amaka C Offiah7,8.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To assess whether head CT with 3D reconstruction can replace skull radiographs (SXR) in the imaging investigation of suspected physical abuse (SPA)/abusive head trauma (AHT).Entities:
Keywords: Abusive head trauma; Child abuse; Physical abuse; Skull fracture; Tomography, spiral computed
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31797078 PMCID: PMC7033062 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-019-06579-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Summary of the 21 fracture positive cases
| Case | Present on SXR | Present on CT | Side | Type | Sutural diastasis | Intracranial haemorrhage/injury |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 2 | Yes | Yes | Left | Linear | Yes | No |
| 3 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 4 | Yes | Yes | Left | Linear | No | No |
| 5 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 6 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 7 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 8 | Yes | Yes | Right | Depressed | No | SDH |
| 9 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | Yes | EDH |
| 10 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 11 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | SDH |
| 12 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | Yes | SAH, parietal contusion |
| 13 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 14 | Yes | Yes | Left | Linear | No | No |
| 15 | Yes | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 16 | Yes | Yes | Left | Linear | Yes | SDH |
| 17 | Yes | Yes | Left | Linear | No | EDH |
| 18 | Yes | Yes | Left | Linear | No | EDH |
| 19 | No | Yes | Left | Linear | No | No |
| 20 | No | Yes | Right | Linear | No | No |
| 21 | Yes | Yes | Left | Linear | No | No |
A skull fracture was reported on either radiographs or head CT by consensus in these 21 cases. All 21 fractures were of the parietal bone. Soft tissue (scalp) swelling was present in all cases on radiographs and/or CT
SXR, skull radiograph(s); EDH, extradural haematoma; SDH, subdural haematoma; SAH, subarachnoid haemorrhage
Diagnostic accuracy for the reporting of skull radiographs and head CT, with and without 3D reconstructions, for both reviewers
| Reviewer 1 | Reviewer 2 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radiograph | CT | CT with 3D | Radiograph | CT | |
| Sensitivity | 81% (95% CI 60–92%) | 81% (95% CI 60–92%) | 100% (95% CI 85–100%) | 77% (95% CI 55–89%) | 81% (95% CI 60–92%) |
| Specificity | 90% (95% CI 82–95%) | 99% (95% CI 93–100%) | 100% (95% CI 96–100%) | 98% (95% CI 92–100%) | 100% (95% CI 96–100%) |
| PPV | 68% (95% CI 48–82%) | 94% (95% CI 74–100%) | 100% (95% CI 85–100%) | 89% (95% CI 67–98%) | 100% (95% CI 89–98%) |
| NPV | 95% (95% CI 88–98%) | 95% (95% CI 89–98%) | 100% (95% CI 96–100%) | 94% (95% CI 88–97%) | 95% (95% CI 89–98%) |
p < 0.001 for all results; CI, confidence interval
Diagnostic accuracy for the reporting of head CT, with and without 3D reconstructions, for reviewer 1
| Reviewer 1 without 3D reconstructions | Reviewer 1 with 3D reconstructions | |
|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity | 81% (95% CI 60–92%; | 100% (95% CI 85–100%) |
| Specificity | 99% (95% CI 93–100%; | 100% (95% CI 96–100%; |
| PPV | 94% (95% CI 74–100%; | 100% (95% CI 85–100%; |
| NPV | 95% (95% CI 89–98%; | 100% (95% CI 96–100%; |
p < 0.001 for all results; CI, confidence interval
Fig. 1AP (a) and lateral (b) skull radiographs of a 16-week-old infant (case 20) following a reported fall. There is soft tissue swelling over the right side of the head (arrow), but no fracture is identified
Fig. 2a–c Selected axial slices (inferior to superior) on bone windows from the head CT in the same infant as Fig. 1 which demonstrate a fracture of the right parietal bone (white arrows) with overlying soft tissue swelling. The corresponding right lateral view of the 3D reconstruction (d) demonstrates the fracture in the right parietal bone (black arrows) which extends to the right squamoparietal suture
Fig. 3False-positive fracture on radiography: AP (a) and lateral skull (b) radiographs of a 24-day-old infant. There is a linear lucency in the occipital bone (black arrows) which was reported as a fracture by one of the reviewers
Fig. 4a–c Selected axial slices (inferior to superior) on bone windows from the head CT examination in the same infant as Fig. 3 which demonstrate a cortical irregularity involving the right occipital bone (white arrows), suggestive of a fracture. However, there is no associated soft tissue swelling and on the 3D reconstruction (d); the cortical irregularity is curvilinear in appearance rather than linear, the latter being more typical of a fracture. The location, adjacent to the lambdoid suture, its appearance, and the absence of soft tissue swelling suggest this is more in keeping with an accessory lambdoid suture (black arrows)